Supporting the Marine Conservation Society’s beach and river cleans is one of many ways we are trying to help the environment.

Tor Harris,
Head of Responsible Sourcing and Sustainability at Waitrose

MCS has been working with Waitrose since last summer on the Waitrose Beach and River Clean-up series. So far, almost 700 beach cleans have taken place involving over 10,000 volunteers. Now, the charity is about to launch a series of 20 river cleans using a similar recording system it uses at its beach cleans.

MCS will be joining forces with leading waterways charity Thames21 in a pilot project to investigate the link between river and marine litter.

Waitrose has donated £500,000 from its carrier bag funds to MCS allowing the charity to put on more clean-ups and mobilise larger numbers of volunteers than ever before in the fight back against the rising tide of plastic litter on our beaches and now in rivers, too.

The cleans will be delivered with Thames 21, who work with communities to shape and deliver sustainable environmental change for rivers, with the ultimate vision of putting healthy rivers at the heart of community life.

Rivers are being harmed by a variety of different pollutants, including large amounts of plastic. The litter found in the UK’s rivers eventually ends up in our coastal waters. MCS says that recording the types of litter found in certain tributaries of the country’s most iconic river – the Thames – will give the charity a more complete picture of source to sea journey of litter.

Lauren Eyles, MCS Beachwatch Manager says the introduction of river cleans will support the growth of the MCS’ beach clean programme, which leads the way in collecting coastal litter data: “These cleans, along the Thames corridor this spring and summer as part of our Waitrose Beach and River Clean project funded by Waitrose, will give us a greater opportunity to increase our understanding of the link between inland behaviour and litter on our beaches.”

The charity will be collating the data it collects from the 20 planned events and using it as a pilot study to look at comparisons with beach litter data. We already know that 80% of ocean plastic comes from landfill and enters the sea via our rivers.

MCS will be collaborating with Thames21 at sites including Maidenhead, Thame, Staines and Reading.

“Rivers are undeniably a conduit for plastic and other litter to enter the marine environment, yet we need to better understand how this is happening,” said Debbie Leach, CEO of Thames21. “Once the relationship between how litter moves from the land into our rivers and seas is more deeply understood, we can then identify ways to prevent it.

“By collaborating with MCS, we are building a clearer picture on the links between river litter and marine litter and collectively helping to solve one of the most pressing issues our rivers and oceans face today.”

Tor Harris, Head of Responsible Sourcing and Sustainability at Waitrose, said: “Supporting the Marine Conservation Society’s beach and river cleans is one of many ways we are trying to help the environment.

“We’ve committed to making all our own-label packaging widely recyclable (using the widely recycled logo), reusable or home compostable by 2025. From September 2018 we will also stop selling packs of plastic straws. We were the first supermarket to stop selling products containing microbeads and exclusively sell paper-stem cotton buds.

“We’re excited for as many people as possible to join us in cleaning our local rivers to improve them for wildlife and all of us.”

The first river clean up in the Waitrose Beach and River Clean-up series will take place at Totteridge in the London Borough of Barnet on Wednesday 21st February at 11am. Led by Thames21, volunteers can help clean up the Dollis Brook, which leads to the River Thames via the River Brent.